Barcelona.com v. Excelentisimo

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 2, 2003
Docket02-1396
StatusPublished

This text of Barcelona.com v. Excelentisimo (Barcelona.com v. Excelentisimo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barcelona.com v. Excelentisimo, (4th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

PUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

BARCELONA.COM, INCORPORATED,  Plaintiff-Appellant, v.  No. 02-1396 EXCELENTISIMO AYUNTAMIENTO DE BARCELONA, Defendant-Appellee.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Alexandria. Claude M. Hilton, Chief District Judge. (CA-00-1412)

Argued: February 28, 2003

Decided: June 2, 2003

Before WILKINSON, NIEMEYER, and MOTZ, Circuit Judges.

Reversed, vacated, and remanded by published opinion. Judge Nie- meyer wrote the opinion, in which Judge Wilkinson and Judge Motz joined.

COUNSEL

ARGUED: Larry Zinn, San Antonio, Texas, for Appellant. Jordan Scot Weinstein, OBLON, SPIVAK, MCCLELLAND, MAIER & NEUSTADT, P.C., Arlington, Virginia, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Jonathan Hudis, OBLON, SPIVAK, MCCLELLAND, MAIER & NEUSTADT, P.C., Arlington, Virginia, for Appellee. 2 BARCELONA.COM v. EXCELENTISIMO AYUNTAMIENTO DE BARCELONA OPINION

NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:

Barcelona.com, Inc. ("Bcom, Inc."), a Delaware corporation, com- menced this action under the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act against Excelentisimo Ayuntamiento de Barcelona (the City Council of Barcelona, Spain) for a declaratory judgment that Bcom, Inc.’s registration and use of the domain name is not unlawful under the Lanham Act (Chapter 22 of Title 15 of the United States Code). The district court concluded that Bcom, Inc.’s use of was confusingly similar to Spanish trade- marks owned by the City Council that include the word "Barcelona." Also finding bad faith on the basis that Bcom, Inc. had attempted to sell the domain name to the City Council for a profit, the court ordered the transfer of the domain name to the City Council.

Because the district court applied Spanish law rather than United States law and based its transfer order, in part, on a counterclaim that the City Council never filed, we reverse the judgment of the district court denying Bcom, Inc. relief under the Anticybersquatting Con- sumer Protection Act, vacate its memorandum opinion and its order to transfer the domain name to the City Council, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I

In 1996, Mr. Joan Nogueras Cobo ("Nogueras"), a Spanish citizen, registered the domain name in the name of his wife, also a Spanish citizen, with the domain registrar, Network Solutions, Inc., in Herndon, Virginia. In the application for registration of the domain name, Nogueras listed himself as the administrative contact. When Nogueras met Mr. Shahab Hanif, a British citizen, in June 1999, they developed a business plan to turn into a tourist portal for the Barcelona, Spain, region. A few months later they formed Bcom, Inc. under Delaware law to own and to run the website, and Nogueras, his wife, and Hanif became Bcom, Inc.’s officers. Bcom, Inc. was formed as an American com- pany in part because Nogueras believed that doing so would facilitate BARCELONA.COM v. EXCELENTISIMO AYUNTAMIENTO DE BARCELONA 3 obtaining financing for the development of the website. Although Bcom, Inc. maintains a New York mailing address, it has no employ- ees in the United States, does not own or lease office space in the United States, and does not have a telephone listing in the United States. Its computer server is in Spain.

Shortly after Nogueras registered the domain name in 1996, he placed some Barcelona-related information on the site. The site offered commercial services such as domain registry and web hosting, but did not offer much due to the lack of financing. Before developing the business plan with Hanif, Nogueras used a web-form on the City Council’s official website to e-mail the mayor of Barcelona, Spain, proposing to "negotiate" with the City Council for its acquisition of the domain name , but Nogu- eras received no response. And even after the development of a busi- ness plan and after speaking with potential investors, Nogueras was unable to secure financing to develop the website.

In March 2000, about a year after Nogueras had e-mailed the Mayor, the City Council contacted Nogueras to learn more about Bcom, Inc. and its plans for the domain name . Nogueras and his marketing director met with City Council represen- tatives, and after the meeting, sent them the business plan that was developed for Bcom, Inc.

On May 3, 2000, a lawyer for the City Council sent a letter to Nogueras demanding that Nogueras transfer the domain name to the City Council. The City Council owned about 150 trademarks issued in Spain, the majority of which included the word Barcelona, such as "Teatre Barcelona," "Barcelona Informacio I Gra- fic," and "Barcelona Informacio 010 El Tlefon Que Ho Contesta Tot." Its earlier effort in 1995 to register the domain name , however, was unsuccessful. The City Council’s representative explained, "It was denied to Barcelona and to all place names in Spain." This representative also explained that the City Council did not try also to register in 1995 even though that domain name was available because "[a]t that time . . . the world Internet that we know now was just beginning and it was not seen as a priority by the City Council." The City Council now took the posi- 4 BARCELONA.COM v. EXCELENTISIMO AYUNTAMIENTO DE BARCELONA tion with Bcom, Inc. that its domain name was con- fusingly similar to numerous trademarks that the City Council owned.

A couple of days after the City Council sent its letter, Nogueras had the domain name transferred from his wife’s name to Bcom, Inc., which he had neglected to do in 1999 when Bcom, Inc. was formed.

Upon Bcom, Inc.’s refusal to transfer to the City Council, the City Council invoked the Uniform Domain Name Dis- pute Resolution Policy ("UDRP") promulgated by the Internet Corpo- ration for Assigned Names and Numbers ("ICANN") to resolve the dispute. Every domain name issued by Network Solutions, Inc. is issued under a contract, the terms of which include a provision requir- ing resolution of disputes through the UDRP. In accordance with that policy, the City Council filed an administrative complaint with the World Intellectual Property Organization ("WIPO"), an ICANN- authorized dispute-resolution provider located in Switzerland. The complaint sought transfer of the domain name to the City Council and relied on Spanish law in asserting that Bcom, Inc. had no rights to the domain name while the City Council had numerous Spanish trademarks that contained the word "Barcelona." As part of its complaint, the City Council agreed "to be subject to the jurisdiction of the registrant[’]s residence, the Courts of Virginia (United States), only with respect to any challenge that may be made by the Respondent to a decision by the Administrative Panel to trans- fer or cancel the domain names that are [the] subject of this com- plaint."

The administrative complaint was resolved by a single WIPO pan- elist who issued a ruling in favor of the City Council on August 4, 2000. The WIPO panelist concluded that was con- fusingly similar to the City Council’s Spanish trademarks, that Bcom, Inc. had no legitimate interest in , and that Bcom, Inc.’s registration and use of was in bad faith. To support his conclusion that Bcom, Inc. acted in bad faith, the WIPO panelist observed that the only purpose of the business plan was "to commercially exploit information about the City of Barcelona . . . par- ticularly . . . the information prepared and provided by [the City Council] as part of its public service." The WIPO panelist ordered BARCELONA.COM v.

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